Openness – a Virtues Pick

I first came across The Virtues Project in about 1993 and have used its principles ever since. Reading the latest facilitator bulletin that comes out roughly once a month, I came across this sentence: “Openness is the willingness to consider new ideas and listen to others with an open mind.”

Yesterday we had a neighboring couple come for a visit and the four of us enjoyed the conversation immensely. As one person commented, we went into depth in the topics we discussed. I felt that everyone was listening to each other and actually sharing ideas.

I want to share with you the virtue of openness and how it is something that is to be worked with.

The Virtue of Openness

The Virtues Project

The Virtues Project started with a book, a guide for parents on what to teach their children. There were 52 virtues, one for each week of the year. I read the book, became enthusiastic with the working method and started implementing the strategies in my family. My two children will remember the weekly family meetings to pick and discuss a new virtue and other family matters that needed to be dealt with.

In addition to the virtues themselves, the Virtues Project also encompasses five strategies:

  1. Speak the language – you have to use the names of the virtues to help children (or adults) learn what is the correct way of being and doing.
  2. Recognize teachable moments – children are only open for learning at certain moments and the trick is to learn when these moments are. These moments don’t always last very long.
  3. Set clear boundaries – children need limits on what they are allowed to do, but the adults must be clear and consistent. The boundaries will change as children grow older. Even adults must set limits as to what they are willing to do.
  4. Honor the spirit – we must respect children and encourage them to learn new things. This also includes creative work and reflection.
  5. Offering companioning – by listening one can help another person with their problems and let them find the solution that will work for them.

The Virtues Project has grown in the last 30 years and encompasses more than teaching one’s own children what is good behavior. The strategies and the language of the virtues are used in many schools around the world. A facilitator is someone who has taken training in how to use the Virtues Project and teach it to others. If you are unfamiliar with the Virtues Project and would like to learn more about their work, you can read about them here.

Willingness

But back to the quotation that I started with. “Openness is the willingness to…” How willing are you? What do we really mean by this word, willingness? Are you only willing, if it is something you already know how to do, or if it is your own idea? Or, are you willing to look at other people’s perspective and new ideas? Do you put yourself in situations where you are open to others who are different than you? Are you willing to try new things?

It is always easier to go along with someone who shares the same ideas as yourself. One of the problems in the world today is the fact that we tend to spend our time with people who share the same ideas as ourselves. We are unwilling to be with those who are different. But this unwillingness to be with those who are different limits our ability to grow and improve ourselves. Unless we listen to new ideas, how can we become better people?

Consider New Ideas

Openness is the willingness to consider new ideas…” Are you stuck in a rut? Do you even want to get out of the rut? Are you willing to listen to new ideas and reflect on them, to consider them?

I am currently reading a book about the climate crisis. Too many people in the world today are stuck in the rut of “business as usual” even though it is killing the planet and is unsustainable. The Earth’s resources are running out. How willing are you to change the way you think about consumption and your contribution to the challenges that the planet Earth is facing today? I am trying to work with the ideas in the book I am reading and find new ways that I can reduce my drain on the world’s resources.

No matter our age, whether we are young or older, we can learn from other people, from books, videos and documentaries. We have to consider the source of these ideas, and whether they are reliable. We must also consider and reflect on the ideas themselves. Do they make sense? How does it all fit in with my view of the world? Does my view of the world need to change? In what way should I change? Where can I find new ideas to help me make better decisions about how to live my life?

Listen to Others

“Openness is the willingness to consider new ideas and listen to others…” When you read a book, or talk to a person, are you really listening to the author or the person? How open are you to changing the way you think, or to accepting new ideas?

Many people don’t really participate in a conversation, they just wait for the other person to finish talking so that they can talk themselves. Listening to others means really taking in what they are saying, reflecting on their words and meaning and then actually discussing the ideas that have been presented.

An Open Mind

“Openness is the willingness to consider new ideas and listen to others with an open mind.” When you listen, do you listen with an open mind? Are you willing to change the way you think? Are you willing to learn about new ways of doing things?

Especially as we get older, we may think that the way we have always done things is the best way. I used to tell the teenagers that I taught that one of the advantages of traveling is to see that there are many ways of doing things and that none of them is “the right way”, they are just different. During life we pick up some of these different ways from others. We don’t always have to do things the way we were taught as children. All people have room to grow and develop even when they have acquired many years of living. This ability to change and improve ourselves is what keeps us young in mind, no matter how old the body is.

We really have to be open to change, if we want to live a healthy and rewarding life. In order to know how to change, or what to change to, we need to be open to new ideas which we reflect on and adapt to our own lifestyle. Sometimes we make big changes, for example, cutting back on how much we drive, and sometimes we make smaller changes, for example, whether we eat local food, or imported food.

The Practice of Openness

“I am honest and transparent. I am direct and candid in sharing my perspective. I appreciate new ideas and possibilities. I sincerely want to communicate. I have no hidden motives. I care about the views and feelings of others. I am willing to receive life’s bounties.”

Today’s challenge to you as my reader, is to find something new and different to read about, or to find a person outside of your usual social environment to converse with. Have an open mind and be willing to really listen to the ideas that others have.

The Climate Book – An Overview

Created by Greta Thunberg and published by Allen Lane /Penguin Books in November 2022.

Greta Thunberg was born in 2003 in Sweden. In 2018 she started a school strike for the climate outside the Swedish Parliament in Stockholm. Since then she has traveled to many places in the world and spoken at many gatherings. She is a person that cares about the planet Earth.

The book is divided into five parts. Greta Thunberg writes an introduction to each part and some comments in between. All her articles are written on blue paper which is to symbolize the blue planet that we live on. In addition there are many experts in various fields to write articles about the science involved in this problem. There is a lot of information in this book which has 446 pages. The main purpose, in my opinion, is to get the reader to think about their own lifestyle, to acquire some knowledge of the problems and perhaps make changes in their own life.

In this first blog I am going to give an overview of what the book covers. In later blogs I will be going into some of the issues that are taken up in this book.

I recommend reading this book, though it can be a bit heavy reading. I am reading it in very small doses and so it is taking several months to get through it. Perhaps it is best this way as then I have time to reflect on the different topics as they are taken up.

Part One How Climate Works

The science of how our climate works is explained in this part. The fact that our climate is changing, and that our weather is getting more extreme, is not debatable. But do you understand how it all fits together? This part of the book is to help the reader get a basic understanding of the science behind it all.

Greta Thunberg has written three articles for this part:

  • To solve this problem, we need to understand it
  • The science is as solid as it gets
  • This is the biggest story in the world

In addition there are six articles:

  • The Deep History of Carbon Dioxide by Peter Brannen
  • Our Evolutionary Impact by Beth Shapiro
  • Civilization and Extinction by Elizabeth Kolbert
  • The Discovery of Climate Change by Michael Oppenheimer
  • Why Didn’t They Act? by Naomi Oreskes
  • Tipping Points and Feedback Loops by Johan Rockström

Part Two How our Planet is Changing

The science behind the changing climate has been known for a long time. I live in a place where most people think that it is fine if the weather was a bit warmer. But warming is not the problem everywhere. More extreme weather which causes storms and floods, rising sea levels and air pollution are all part of the problem. I found these articles interesting as they explain problems that other parts of the world are experiencing.

Greta Thunberg has written three articles for this part:

  • The weather seems to be on steroids
  • The snowball has been set in motion
  • It is much closer to home than we think

There are 21 articles in this part, most of them are quite short, about two pages, though some are longer. These are experts in their fields giving information on what is actually happening.

  • Heat, by Katharine Hayhoe
  • Methane and Other Gases by Zeke Hausfather
  • Air Pollution and Aerosols by Bjørn H. Samset
  • Clouds by Paulo Coppi
  • Arctic Warming and the Jet Stream by Jennifer Francis
  • Dangerous Weather by Friederike Otto
  • Drought and Floods by Kare Marvel
  • Ice Sheets, Shelves and Glaciers by Ricarda Winkelmann
  • Warming Oceans and Rising Seas by Stefan Rahmstorf
  • Acidification and Marine Ecosystems by Hans-Otto Pörtner
  • Microplastics by Karin Kvale
  • Fresh Water by Peter H. Gleick
  • Wildfires by Joëlle Gergis
  • The Amazon by Carlos Nobre, Julia Arieira and Nathália Nascimento
  • Boreal and Temperate Forests by Beverly Law
  • Terrestrial Biodiversity by Andy Purvis and Adriana De Palma
  • Insects by Dave Goulson
  • Nature’s Calendar by Keith W. LArson
  • Soil by Jennifer L. Soong
  • Permafrost by Ôrjan Gustafsson
  • What Happens at 1.5, 2 and 4 degrees C of Warming? by Tamsin Edwards

Part Three How It Affects Us

When the climate changes, it can affect our water and food supplies. It can affect our health. We are not all equally affected but usually the poor are hit hardest. This part helped me better understand how others are being affected, those who live in other parts of the world.

The three articles by Greta Thunberg are:

  • The world has a fever
  • We are not all in the same boat
  • Enormous challenges are waiting

In addition there are 17 articles:

  • Health and Climate by Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus
  • Heat and Illness by Ana M. Vicedo-Cabrera
  • Air Pollution by Drew Shindell
  • Vector-borne Diseases by Felipe J. Colón-González
  • Antibiotic Resistance by John Brownstein, Derek MacFadden, Sarah McGough and Maruicio Sentilland
  • Food and Nutrition by Samuel S. Myers
  • Life at 1.1 degrees C
  • Environmental Racism by Jacqueline Patterson
  • Climate Refugees by Abrahm Lustfarten
  • Sea-level Rise and Small Islands by Michael Taylor
  • Rain in the Sahel by Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim
  • Winter in Sápmi by Elin Anna Labba
  • Fighting for the Forest by Sonia Guajajara
  • Warming and Inequality by Solomon Hsiang
  • Water Shortages by Taikan Oki
  • Climate Conflicts by Marshall Burke
  • The True Cost of Climate Change by Eugene Linden

Part Four What We’ve Done About It

It has been quite depressing reading about what has actually been done, as it is so little. Emissions are increasing. Governments and businesses are avoiding the changes that are necessary. Some of these articles are about some of the fancy ideas that are being tried, but aren’t necessarily working.

The five articles by Greta Thunberg are:

  • How can we undo our failures if we are unable to admit that we have failed?
  • We are not moving in the right direction
  • A whole new way of thinking
  • They keep saying one thing while doing another
  • This is where we draw the line

In addition there are 22 articles:

  • The New Denialism by Kevin Anderson
  • The Truth about Government Climate Targets by Alexandra Urisman Otto
  • The Persistence of Fossil Fuels by Bill McKibben
  • The Rise of Renewables by Glen Peters
  • How Can Forests Help Us? by Karl-Heinz Erb and Simone Gingrich
  • What about Geoengineering? by Niclas Hällström, Jennie C. Stephens and Isak Stoddard
  • Drawdown Technologies by Rob Jackson
  • Our Imprint on the Land by Alexander Popp
  • The Calorie Question by Michael Clark
  • Designing New Food Systems by Sonja Vermeulen
  • Mapping Emission in an Industrial World by John Barrett and Alice Garvey
  • The Technical Hitch by Ketan Joshi
  • The Challenge of Transport by Alice Larkin
  • Is the Future Electric? by Jillian Anable and Christian Brand
  • The Cost of Consumerism by Annie Lowrey
  • How (Not) to Buy by Mike Berners-Lee
  • Waste around the World by Silpa Kaza
  • The Myth of Recycling by Nina Schrank
  • Emissions and Growth by Nicholas Stern
  • Equity by Sunita Narain
  • Degrowth by Jason Hickel
  • The Perception Gap by Amitav Ghosh

Part Five What We Must Do Now

If we are to prevent the earth becoming severely affected, we have to do an awful lot more than is being done. There are still too many people in places of power who are not doing what it takes to prevent global warming on a significant scale.

There are four articles by Greta Thunberg:

  • The most effective way to get out of this mess is to educate ourselves
  • We now have to do the seemingly impossible
  • Honesty, solidarity, integrity and climate justice
  • Hope is something you have to earn

In addition there are 17 articles:

  • Individual Action, Social Transformation by Stuart Capstick and Lorraine Whitmarsh
  • Towards 1.5 Degrees C Lifestyles by Kate Raworth
  • Overcoming Climate Apathy by Per Espen Stoknes
  • Changing Our Diets by Godon Eshel
  • Remembering the Ocean by Ayana Elizabeth Johnson
  • Rewilding by George Monbiot and Rebecca Wrigley
  • Practical Utopias by Margaret Atwood
  • People Power by Erica Chenoweth
  • Changing the Media Narrative by George Monbiot
  • Resisting the New Denialism by Michael E. Mann
  • A Genuine Emergency Response by Seth Klein
  • Lessons from the Pandemic by David Wallace-Wells
  • A Just Transition by Naomi Klein
  • What Does Equity Mean to You by Nicki Becker, Disha A. Ravi, Hilda Flavia Nakabuye, Laura Verónica Muñoz, Ina Maria Shikongo, Ayisha Siddiqa and Mitzi Jonelle Tan
  • Women and the Climate Crisis by Wanjora Mathai
  • Decarbonization Requires Redistribution by Lucas Chancel and Thomas Piketty
  • Climate Reparations by Olúféemi O. Tálwò
  • Mending Our Relationship with the Earth by Robin Wall Kimmerer

I have a paper copy of the book which uses 446 pages to share these articles, some pictures and graphs and an index. There is a web site for looking up where the references come from.

At the moment I am reading Part Four and will share my reactions and more detailed comments about each part of the book in future blogs. I am enjoying the book and it is making me think about the conditions in the world. We are all very quick to criticize what others do, but I want to work out what I can do in my life. I cannot change other people, but I can change the way I live and what I do.

I hope you will also read this book and work out ways that you too can be part of the solution and not just part of the problem.

“What Happened to You?” – Book Review

This book is written as a conversation between the two authors, Bruce D. Perry and Oprah Winfrey. The subtitle is: “Conversations on Trauma, Resilience and Healing”. This book was published by Flatiron Books, New York, in 2021.

I would like to recommend this book to anyone who works with or has children. It may also give you insights into yourself. I found the presentation of the material easy to understand. The use of examples from the authors’ work, as well as explanations of the science behind the working of the brain, made it easier for me to relate to the material being discussed. I ended up reflecting on a lot of the material, perhaps almost too much, but there were several times while reading the book that I felt that I had really learned something new which I wished I had known a long time ago.

Dr. Bruce D. Perry is a clinician and researcher in neuroscience and psychiatry. He has worked primarily with traumatized children. His role in the book is to explain what is happening in the brain both when a child experiences trauma or neglect and how what happens in the brain affects a person’s experiences later in life.

Opray Winfrey is primarily known as a talk show host with her own show from 1986 to 2011. Growing up in rural Mississippi she experienced much trauma in her childhood and brings personal experience to the book. She has also interviewed many people who have experienced trauma and encourages the reader to understand what has happened to these people that make them the way they became as adults.

These two authors use personal experience and explain the science of what happens in the brain when a person, especially a young child, undergoes a traumatic experience, whether it is short-lived or goes over years. When things go wrong for someone, they are both concerned with what happened to this person in the past, whether it was a week ago, or several decades ago. Using examples and stories of people, the book both tries to explain what happens in the brain, but also what can be done later to heal the person and help them learn a better way of living.

The book is divided into an introduction and ten chapters and I would like to give a very brief summary of what I found most important in each chapter. I recommend this book to everyone, as it will give you a new perspective on the people you either work with or live with and give you, hopefully, an aha experience about yourself and why you are like you are.

Introduction

Our brains are very adaptable and are changing all of the time. “Understanding how the brain reacts to stress or early trauma helps clarify how what has happened to us in the past shapes who we are, how we behave and why we do the things we do.” (Page 9) We must also remember that good experiences also shape the brain.

Using the phrase, “What happened to you?” puts the emphasis on how experiences, both good and bad have shaped us. It made me think of personal things, for example, how my sister and I had very different early years, and how my two children also had very different early years, in spite of growing up in the same family.

Chapter 1 Making Sense of the World

When a baby is born, it begins trying to make sense of their surroundings. “The developing infant acts and feels, and these actions and feelings help organize how they will think.” (Page 19). The child’s individual history influences the way the brain develops with the result that every individual is unique. Everyone sees and understands the world in a unique way.

Through examples and diagrams of the brain, Dr. Perry explains how these unique experiences influence the way the brain develops. “Moment by moment in early life, our developing brain sorts and stores our personal experiences, making our personal codebook that helps us interpret the world. Each of us creates a unique worldview shaped by our life’s experiences.” (Page 21)

The brain grows very rapidly in the first few years of life and the child’s early experiences have a very large impact on the infant and later the child. A worldview is already being formed from day one, whether the child has responsible and good caregivers, or is abused or neglected.

Chapter 2 Seeking Balance

“Rhythm is essential to a healthy body and a healthy mind.” (Page 31) Something rhythmic will help us calm down, whether it is walking, swimming, knitting or dancing. Rhythm is regulating and regulation is about being in balance with ourselves and our world. “When we get out of balance, we become dysregulated and feel discomfort or distress. When we get back into balance, we feel better.” (Page 32)

Babies need to learn self-regulation from the caregivers around them, but much can go wrong if they do not have good caregivers. Babies that grow up in a nurturing, supportive and caring environment are being regulated when the caregiver responds to a cry of distress. “A consistent, nurturing caregiver builds an internal view that people are safe, predictable and caring.” (Page 34) But not all babies are lucky in the caregivers in their lives. The opposite is also discussed in this chapter.

Chapter 3 How We Were Loved

“Belonging and being loved are core to the human experience.” (Page 48) Social interactions are an integral part of being human and it is our earliest relationships that set the pattern for the rest of our lives. “To the newborn, love is action; it is the attentive, responsive, nurturing care that adults provide.” (Page 48) The actions that a baby experiences sets the way the brain develops and the child’s worldview is formed.

Chapter 4 The Spectrum of Trauma

Instead of asking someone or yourself, “What’s wrong with you?”, we need to ask the question “What happened to you?” What we experienced as a child, whether good or bad, influences how we live our lives as adults. This chapter is designed to help you recognize if you have experienced any trauma in your early years. According to Dr. Perry, almost 50 percent of children in the United States have had at least one significant traumatic experience. (Page 62)

This chapter includes a discussion of what the word, “trauma”, means and how it is used. An example is given to show how the same event will be experienced quite differently depending on how the person is involved in the event.

The specific effects of a traumatic event on a person’s health is influence by a variety of factors including genetic vulnerability, the age of the person at which the trauma event happened and any history of previous trauma. Having healthy relationships will also influence positively the effect of a traumatic event. Trauma plays a major role in many mental health disorders, but not all.

Chapter 5 Connecting the Dots

“We absorb things from previous generations and pass them on to the next generation.” (Page 78) This can include a fear of something, for example, dogs. This chapter discusses how fear can be transmitted between generations, “What happened to us?” We inherit more than genes from our parents.

For an individual to make intentional change, he/she must identify what has happened either at the individual level or at the cultural level. Values and beliefs are learned and absorbed from the adults around us and then taught to the next generation. “If we want to enrich the transmission of humane, compassionate values, beliefs and practices, and minimize the transmission of hateful, destructive beliefs, we need to be very mindful of what we’re exposing our children to.” (Page 82)

“Developmental adversity increases the risk for all kinds of health problems, including heart disease, asthma, gastrointestinal problems, and autoimmune disease.” (Page 86) Treating physical health problems has to take into consideration experienced trauma. “Many trauma-related health problems are dismissed, missed, and misunderstood.” (Page 87)

Chapter 6 From Coping to Healing

“Neglect and trauma can co-occur but they cause very different biological experiences and can have very different effects on the brain and the developing child.” (Page 100) There is still a lot to learn about how the brain develops, but research is being done.

It can be that one important area of development, for example, emotional development, is relatively ignored or understimulated. “The key to having many healthy relationships in your life is having only a few safe, stable and nurturing relationships in your first year.” (Page 104) This builds the foundation that allows the child to continue to grow healthy relational connections. Parents have to be fully engaged and present with their children. It matters who is raising a child in its first years.

Dissociation is a coping mechanism that occurs when an individual feels that a threatening situation is inescapable. The child retreats into an inner world and avoids conflict. “People-pleasing is a classic coping mechanism that is part of the compliant behaviors seen with dissociation.” (Page 113)

You can’t get rid of the past, but therapy is about building new associations, making new, healthier default pathways, building a better alternative. (Page 117) But building new alternatives takes repetition and time.

Chapter 7 Post-Traumatic Wisdom

“We are always changing. We change from all of our experiences, good and bad. This is because our brain is changeable – malleable. It’s always changing.” (Page 120) It is impossible to go back to the way things were before a trauma. “Adversity impacts the developing child.” (Page 121) This chapter includes a discussion of what has been learned about how the brain changes when exposed to stress. The experiences a child has had during its first year will influence how it can react to stress situations later in life, even the learning situation of a classroom at school.

“Healthy development involves a series of challenges and exposure to new things. And failure is an important part of the process.” (Page 124) But the challenges have to be reasonable for the child’s, or adult’s, level of development. You can’t learn to write paragraphs until you have learned to write words. “A child in an environment where they feel loved and safe will choose to leave their comfort zone.” (Page 124) Safety and stability are the keys for healthy growth.

Using several examples of how communities offer healing, it becomes clear that a child needs more than one stable adult in their life to be able to experience healthy development.

Chapter 8 Our Brains, Our Biases, Our Systems

“Your past is not an excuse. But it is an explanation” (Page 137) of how we have become the person we are. Healing begins when we can look at the past and work towards a better future. There are still very few professionals and organizations that understand how much trauma people have experienced.

“The complexities of trauma impact all of our systems, from maternal-child health to child welfare to education, law enforcement, mental health and more.” (Page 138) The old ways of doing things take a long time to change, even when it has been acknowledged that they weren’t really working. The term “trauma-informed care” is a term that is used regularly in this chapter to indicate that health care and education need to be more aware of how trauma has affected so many people. The term can be used differently depending on which system you are in, and treatments that are offered can vary widely. The study of trauma is a very young science.

Marginalization, being excluded, minimized or shamed, is also a trauma that dehumanizes many people. Marginalization can occur because of race, gender or sexual orientation. A child with traumatic experiences will often have difficulty learning, often overreacting to the feedback and criticisms that come in an ordinary classroom. (Page 140) This leads to behavioral problems that are often misunderstood. Many children may be diagnosed with ADHD because of their response to stress, but it is really a coping technique that the child has developed based on previous experiences.

“When schools do learn about the effects of trauma and make some simple changes in how they evaluate, support and teach, they see dramatic improvements in academic achievement and decreases in challenging and disruptive behaviors.” (Page 145)

“One of the most important aspects of healing is recognizing that it can involve multiple therapeutic techniques and approaches.” (Page 147) This chapter goes on to explain some of these techniques and how they help. Not everyone can afford or have access to professional help, but having access to several caring people gives better outcomes after trauma. These caring people can be family or community groups.

Chapter 9 Relational Hunger in the Modern World

“We live in environments where we see fewer people, and even when we do see people and engage in conversation, we’re not really listening to each other or being fully present. And this disconnection is making us more vulnerable.” (Page 164) “Our ability as a people to tolerate stressors is diminishing because our connectedness is diminishing… Many people are overly reactive to relatively minor challenges.” (Page 164) It is normal that people miscommunicate but then they repair things This builds resilience. If you walk away, everybody loses. “We all need to get better at listening, regulating, reflecting. This requires the capacity to forgive, to be patient.” (Page 164)

Our modern life gives fewer opportunities to relate to others. We live in smaller family units, or alone. Spending time in front of a screen also reduces the time spent communicating with other people. People have become more self-absorbed, more anxious and more depressed. “I believe we don’t have enough quiet conversational moments listening to a friend with no other distractions.” (Page 170)

Chapter 10 What We Need Now

This last chapter in the book brings an optimistic note to the end of a long conversation between the two authors. Understanding what has happened to people, and knowing the source of a problem, gives a better understanding of how to fix the problem. In addition, a teacher or parent needs to be aware of when a child is in a teachable moment and is able to understand what is being said. These moments may be very short.

“It is never too late. Healing is possible. The key is knowing where to start the process. And matching the developmental needs of the person.” (Page 182)

“When you’ve lived through adversity, you can come to a point in your life where you can look back, reflect, learn and grow from the experience. Adversity, challenges, disappointment, loss, trauma – all can contribute to the capacity to be broadly empathic, to become wise.” (Page 184)

I have given a few excerpts direct from the book with the intention of encouraging you to read the book for yourself. Some of the stories in the book are very disturbing and perhaps you will need to put it aside or hop over parts of it. But the authors are optimistic that healing is possible for those who have had traumatic experiences.

Liatjønna and Melting Lake, Mosvik

Liatjønna, Mosvik

I haven’t been writing many blogs this summer as most of the walks I have taken, I have written about before. But today, my husband and I went to a little lake, Liatjønna, that has a short walk part way around it and then we decided to go for a longer walk along the gravel road that gives access to this little lake but also continues for about 3 kilometers.

When my husband asked me where I wanted to go walking this Sunday, I suggested somewhere the sun was shining. In November, the daylight comes late (today sunrise was at 8:12) and leaves early (today sunset was at 15:45). With only about 7 hours of daylight, getting some sunshine becomes important. After checking my weather app on my phone, we headed to Mosvik and the little lake, Liatjønna, that you see in the picture above.

As you can see from the picture, there was a little bit of blue sky, some clouds, but very little direct sunshine. The sun does not rise very high in the sky at this time of year, but at least it felt a bit bright. There was no wind and about 5 degrees Celsius. There is a gravel path about three quarters of the way around the lake, but you have to come back the same way. In places the path was quite damp as we have had lots of rain lately, and I am sure they get more rain up here in the hills of Mosvik than we get down by the fjord.

Liatjønna, Mosvik

It is now fall/autumn and nature reflects the time of year. Deciduous trees have lost their leaves. Coniferous trees are still green. In the foreground you will see small pine trees and in the distance there are primarily spruce trees. Between me and the lake there is swampland and most of the grasses growing there have turned brown.

When we got back to the car, we felt that we hadn’t walked enough and wanted to walk more as it was pleasant to be out of the house and out in the fresh air. So we chose to just walk along the gravel road that goes across the swampy areas, through some forest and out along a narrow peninsula that juts out into the bigger lake, Melting Lake.

Melting Lake, Mosvik

Melting Lake is a large lake with a very irregular shape. We are actually walking along a little peninsula that juts out into the lake and though we never saw the lake on both sides of us at the same time, we did see it occasionally on the other side as well. As you can see in the picture above, the sky is quite cloudy and though the far side of the lake is in brighter light, we are walking in a relatively dark area.

Melting Lake, Mosvik

Melting Lake is a regulated lake and is used to make electricity for our region. As you can see in the picture above, there is quite a shoreline, showing that, in spite of a lot of rain all summer, the water is being used to produce electricity.

Near Liatjønna, Mosvik

We walked about 2 km along the gravel road, then decided that we were half tired, so turned around and headed back to the car where a thermos of coffee and two mugs were waiting for us. As we headed back, we met a couple with a dog, and a van passed us going back to the road. We weren’t the only ones out on a Sunday morning.

We were out of the house for over 2 hours and probably were walking for about one and a half hours. It was a walk I would do another time. Walking around the little lake, there was noise from the road that goes close by, but once we were walking on the gravel road, we quickly got away from traffic noise. It was a pleasant Sunday walk.

Dandelion Season

We live in the municipality of Inderøy and its official flower is the dandelion. When one looks at the fields in Inderøy during the second half of May, it can be seen why this flower has been chosen.

A field in Inderøy, picture taken on 25 May 2022.

As an agricultural municipality, there are many fields in Inderøy which are devoted to growing grass to feed animals. These fields are not plowed every year and each year the crop of dandelions in any given field will increase. Then the farmer plows the field and the field becomes primarily green the first summer.

The Latin name for the common dandelion is Taraxacum officinale. In Norwegian it is called løvetann (lion’s tooth). The English name, dandelion, seems to come from the French name for the plant, dent-de-lion, which also means the lion’s tooth.

Lots of dandelions in this field and they mostly bloom at the same time.

Here in Norway, the dandelion will have its first flowering in May, or perhaps June at higher altitudes. Where I live, it will be found along the edges of roads as well as in gardens and fields. Beekeepers say that it is an important flower for the bees early in the season. This year there have been comments in the Norwegian press to refrain from cutting one’s lawn and letting wild flowers grow, as the bees need the nourishment.

A group of dandelions growing in a grassy field. Picture taken 27 May 2022.

Dandelions have a characteristic yellow flower that opens wide on sunny days and long toothed leaves. When they grow in the open, they are very upright plants. When they grow with other plants, they can grow very tall in the competition for sunlight. They do not have to be pollinated and therefore can produce seeds that have the same genetic information as the parent flower. This means that even without insects, the flowers will go to seed. The flower grows on a hollow stem and the leaves grow separately from the long root. If the leaves and flower are broken off, the plant will regrow from the root.

All parts of the dandelion are edible and provide vitamins A and K, as well as calcium and iron.

At night, the dandelion closes its flowers. On a cloudy morning, the flowers have not opened completely. Some are closed completely while the seed is formed.
If a dandelion grows where the grass is cut, it’s leaves will spread out along the ground instead of growing primarily upright. The flower will come out on a very short stem.
Some of the dandelion flowers have become gray and the fluffy seeds will spread in the wind. In this picture we can see that the dandelions on this road bank are almost finished and the next flowering plant (Anthriscus sylvestris / hundekjeks / cow parsley or Queen Anne’s lace) will soon dominate the roadside.

I usually consider the dandelion a weed and will remove as many as possible before they go to seed. However, I do find it an attractive flower and quite understand how it is an important flower for bees.

Aunan and Floåsen

The view from Aunan, looking west. The gap in the distance is Trondheim Fjord with Levanger on the left and Mosvik on the right.

Tuesday, May the 24th, was a Bahá’í holy day, so my husband and I decided to take a walk in the hills at Røra. It is an area we both enjoy walking in. Today’s walk was about 2 hours plus a sandwich break for about 15 minutes. I have been to both Aunan and Floåsen before and if you want to read about the walk taken to Aunan in August 2021, you can read it here.

As we started our walk, I wondered what sort of theme I should have for this blog and my husband suggested “signs”, so that will be the main theme. What sorts of signs do we see while walking in the woods? Some are easy to read, some are directional (i.e. which way to go), some were about the place where we found the sign, some were almost impossible to read, some were official signs, some were hand-made. I think one thing that can be learned from some of these pictures is that signs with writing on them need to be looked after.

The parking area at Røflo Lake has a sign indicating that one is allowed to park here. There is also a sign showing which posts can be reached from this parking area.

When taking an Inderøy walk, one of the first signs one sees is the indication of where parking is allowed. This year they are wanting people to park in one place and find multiple posts from the same parking spot. From this parking area, one can walk to six different posts depending on how far one wants to walk. We visited two posts, nr. 46 Aunan and nr. 45 Fløåsen.

This map covers an area called “The Old King’s Road” and up to Marsteinsvola which is a hilltop at the junction of the municipalities of Steinkjer, Inderøy and Verdal.

One of the things I have learned over the years (at least since having a camera on a smart phone) is to take a picture of the map that is posted at the parking area. One can always look at it if one isn’t sure which trail goes through. The app for the Inderøy Walks has a good map, but not all trails are actually marked on it. Today we were walking on some good trails that didn’t seem to be on the app’s map at all, though the dot that shows us where we actually are indicated that we were going in the correct direction.

Our walk started at Røflo lake which is the main drinking water source for the municipality of Inderøy. The water is purified before sending it out to the customers which also include a juice factory.

Drinking water – fishing, bathing and camping are forbidden.
This is an older sign which has been looked after. It is important to repaint the lettering regularly. Translation: “Røflo Lake is the municipality’s source of drinking water. Help us keep the water clean. It is not allowed to bathe in the water or to camp in the area. Fishing is only allowed for those who have special permission.”
Røflo Lake would freeze over in the winter, so it becomes important to have a warning sign. Translation: “Danger: Unsafe ice. Traffic on the ice is forbidden. Openings can occur because of draining.” Notice also the gray box below the sign has a number on it. These gray boxes are usually connected to electricity.
Near the parking area, there were a lot of electricity poles which, of course, each have a sign on them warning of the danger. “High voltage, life threatening” plus a number.
These two signs indicate that there are grazing sheep on the other side and give information on the purpose of this area as well as contact information if one sees injured animals or other problems. Dogs must be on a leash.

The field closest to the parking area had cows out today. They are usually kept close to the barn for milking. However sheep are sent up into the hills for the summer and are expected to look after themselves. Here there is a fence so that they don’t get out onto the road. We saw the sheep briefly and the lambs are still quite small. We saw two lambs laying on the grass resting and eating the grass that was in reach!

We will cross the road and head up the steep trail on the other side.

Most of the walks in Inderøy have good signs to indicate how to get places. The sign above shows that we are on a blue trail (not so easy trail, but not too difficult either) taking us to Floåsen. Under the blue man is the name of the organization that is responsible for this trail, Røra Sports Club, and at the extreme lower left hand corner is the number 28. All this type of signs have a number. The red and white tape on the sign indicate that this is a marked trail for this year’s Inderøy Walks.

We came to a bridge with a railing, crossing a stream that was very gentle today. Wooden bridges like this can get very slippery in the rain so having a railing on one side is very nice. On this bridge there were also two signs, neither of which were easy to read.

Not all of this sign is easy to read, even though it has a plastic cover on it. There is the name of the bridge (“bru”), a date (30-9-2011) and the name of who put it up (Floåsens Venner = Friends of Floåsen)
On the far end of the bridge was a different sign, which also needed a bit of maintenance to be easier to read. I couldn’t read everything on this one, though it also seems to mention “Friends of Floåsen”.
I came across this sign that was almost impossible to read, but the text indicated that you could borrow this shovel, but please return it here on your way back.

This was the first time that we had gone walking in this area this year. Last year we had gone too early and the trail we had taken was still covered in a lot of snow. So I was curious to see if there was much snow left at all. We’ve had plenty of warm weather and sunshine so I wasn’t expecting too much snow left now.

This was the biggest patch of snow that I saw on our walk. It was in a very shady area, under the trees.
Aunan to the left and Floåsen to the right.

Aunan is a relatively new place to go to in these hills. It is a hilltop that has been recently logged so that there is a beautiful view looking north and west. These signs have been put up after the more professional signs were erected along the trails. At the distance this picture is taken, it is hard to read what is written, but it was quite clear when one stood closer. We headed off to the left to go to Aunan first. We made a circle tour and came back to this intersection on our way back from Floåsen.

Of course there is a sign where we check-in for the post. This picture shows what a logged area looks like a few years later. There are lots of white anemone blooming, an early spring flower that will cover the ground.
The view from Aunan, with Røflo Lake in the foreground and Straumen in the distance. The hills in the far distance are in the municipality of Steinkjer.

On the way up to Aunan I had seen a sign that indicated a path and I suggested to Brock that we take it and explore. He agreed, so we ended up taking the long way round to Floåsen, but along lovely trails through the forest.

The sign indicates that Marsteinsvola is in that direction, so we take that trail and look for a turn off it to Floåsen.
Part of a trail that we hadn’t taken before. It is well used, even though it wasn’t on the map I had.
We have come from Aunan. Marsteinsvola is another hilltop, but we won’t go there today. We head off to Floåsen. This next section of the trail we have been on before, on our way back from Marsteinsvola.
Floåsen

Though there is a lovely view from Aunan, Floåsen is an open area in the middle of the forest. There are two buildings at Floåsen, and there are several signs here. The sign below tells the story of this location. This was originally a farm owned by the King. It was purchased by municipality of Røra in 1924. The cabin that is here is owned by the Røra School.

More signs, a map, a notice that this is a check-in post for Inderøy Walks, and a box put up by the local sports club, with a book inside. You can write your name in the book to indicate that you have been here.
The sign says, “Floåsbua, Åpen for alle, Floåsens Venner”
Translation: Floås Cabin, open for everyone, Friends of Floåsen
The left hand door leads to a toilet and to the right is a room with a small kitchen, where one could take shelter in bad weather. We sat at a picnic table outdoors and ate some sandwiches.
Two places we decided not to go to today.

We had now been walking for about one and a half hours, enjoying our time out in nature. There were other places we could have walked to from here, but we agreed that going back to the car was appropriate. Taking the quickest way back it would take about half an hour to the car.

We found this angel hanging in the tree on our way back to the car.

The walk took a little over two hours, in cloudy weather and about 14 degrees Celsius. We were tired by the time we got back to the car, but we want to do walks this long regularly so that we keep in good shape and grow old gracefully. We got to try a different trail we hadn’t been on before and we didn’t get lost.

I hope you have a chance to get out for a walk today. Enjoy nature! They say trees are good for our mental health.

Inderøy Walks 2022

Today, Sunday, the 8th of May, was the first day of the Inderøy Walks for 2022. My husband and I took our first walk today. There were also a lot of other people out walking too. The weather was mostly just cloudy, but we had one rain shower while we were in the forest, so we didn’t get too wet.

This year there are 48 posts and often several can be found on the same walk. We did a circle tour and were able to check in to three posts. We use an app on our phones to check in to posts when we get to them. For several years now, there have been posts that have been accessible to those who use wheelchairs (which also allows access for those with baby buggies or strollers), but this year there are also several posts that are accessible for those who are kayaking. However, I will be traditional and use my two feet. Today, I also borrowed my husband’s second walking stick to see if that was useful. On flat bits, I didn’t like having to carry the stick, but on steep areas it was useful.

We parked at our local recycling center (previously known as the garbage dump) and headed off on an easy walk through relatively open terrain. The trees are just starting to put out their leaves. The walk from the car to Markaplassen was about 600 meters.

Yes, we could walk to Vangshylla and home from here, but it’s a bit too far for me. Today we chose to go left, towards Markaplassen. There were new information signs along this path, primarily about insects, birds or other animals. The blue hiker on the signs indicate that this is middle difficulty, though the section we did today was quite easy. In spite of recent rain, the ground was not muddy or particularly wet.
Here is the trail and the open forest that we were walking through. The trail is marked both with signs and streamers. The red arrows are an older version of the signs. Today they use signs with a hiker on them.
Our first post, number 25, for 2022. We got 10 points each for this easy walk.
This little shelter at Markaplassen can be used if the weather turns bad. There would be benches inside to sit on. We were still energetic so we continued our walk without sitting down.

New this year were two posts on the Stene Nature and Culture Path. It is posted as a green trail, which means it is quite easy. It is not a very long trail, but does go around in a circle. We came to the path from the right on the map below and took the trail in a counter-clockwise direction, meeting many people going in the opposite direction.

We came from Markaplassen (labeled 3 on the map, went up to the main car road, crossed over it and followed the red dotted line in a counter-clockwise direction.

It is always fun trying a new trail. This trail was well marked with streamers, and I’m sure by the end of the summer, it will be very easy to see on the ground as well. However, there were many narrow trails, probably deer trails, in the forest so we had to keep a good eye on the streamers in the trees.

Into the trees we go. We had to keep an eye on the red and white streamers so that we went in the right direction. Most of this trail was in a coniferous forest that has not been logged recently. We climbed quite a bit, so we got good exercise.
Our second post of the day, number 24, was called Furutoppen, the Pine Top, Here we got 20 points for our efforts.
The forest at Furutoppen.

There was a little bench to sit on while we checked in on our app. We now had been to two posts and gotten 30 points each. Onward ho! We have to get back to the car, so we keep on going. We are enjoying the quiet of the forest, though every now and then we hear the voices of others who are out walking. It is Sunday, so lots of people will be out on the trails today.

While we were in the forest, there was a short rain shower. By the time it was finished we came out into the open where the forest had been cut down, perhaps a year or two ago. I noticed that small spruce trees had been planted in this logged area.

Looking back the way we came. We are going downhill now, and I’m looking back at the forest we have come out of.
Suddenly, when we get out into the open, there is a view over the farmland of Utøy. It is just clearing up after a short rain shower.
Our third post of the walk, number 23, for which we got 10 points.
They have made a nice sitting area here, with a view out over farmland and the fjord. The island of Ytterøy is in the background.
Suddenly, the sun has come out again. We’ve just come down this section of the trail and it was very nice to have both a railing to hold onto and a walking stick to help with balance.

We enjoyed our walk today, in spite of the weather not really cooperating at one point. We were prepared for rain and mud, so there was really no problem. We used about one and a half hours on this round trip and we agreed that we would do it again. Though we have to drive to get to the starting point, the parking area is only about ten minutes drive from home.

I hope you get out for a walk today too. Enjoy the nature you have near you.

Easter in Norway, 2022

Though Easter is a moveable Christian holiday marking the death of Jesus Christ, in Norway this is a national holiday that no longer has anything to do with Christianity. Though Christians may attend church services, most people just see it as a nice break from work or school. Most people will have a five-day weekend and it is traditionally the time to either go to the mountains and have one last skiing trip, or head to the cabin near a fjord and get it ready for the summer season.

Thursday, Friday, Sunday and Monday are all days that are holy days and therefore most people will have the time off, unless they have a job that has to be manned 24 hours a day and seven days a week, like the police, hospitals and other health care services. Schools take the whole week off, so that children and students get ten days free. Stores are open on Saturday, but will often close a bit early so that the workers can also have extra free time. For example, my local grocery store has standard opening hours from 7 am to 11 pm but on the Saturday before Easter Sunday they will close at 4 pm.

I’ve never been keen on skiing, but getting into the woods and up a mountain have always been things I like to do. For me, this year, this is the week that my walking season has begun in earnest. Yesterday I took a one-and-a-half hour walk with my son and we covered about 5 km. However, I took no pictures yesterday so I won’t write more about that walk except to say that I really enjoyed it and I wanted to do more.

Today was again a bright sunny day. There was frost when I got up, but as the sun climbed higher in the sky, the air temperature warmed up considerably. While my son and my husband headed off for a day-trip in the car, I got a ride to a drop-off point that is about 5 km from home. I walk up and along a back road that brings me to Skarnsund Bridge, cross the bridge and walk through the woods to home again. It is only on the bridge that I have to listen to the noise of cars. Today I used two and a half hours, so probably walked almost 8 km.

The typical Easter weather that everyone wants is a sunny day, with heat in the sunshine. Today was a good day for fulfilling that dream weather.

Dream weather for an Easter walk – sunshine and no wind. Too bad the photographer couldn’t hold the camera parallel to the horizon. We can blame it on sun in her eyes, or perhaps just carelessness.

Though the snow is gone in low-lying areas, I was prepared for snow as I climbed up the hill. Mosvik gets a lot more precipitation than we get at Vangshylla. I quite often notice it raining or snowing in Mosvik and we don’t get anything. We also got a lot of precipitation in March this year, often as snow in higher elevations. Several storms would also have blown the snow, causing drifts in open areas in the woods.

Dalavegen in Mosvik is a back road with only a few houses on it, but it is kept open all winter long. However there are a lot of trees preventing the sun from melting the snow in the ditches. The higher I climbed up, the more snow there was. I use about 20 minutes to walk up this road as it is a steady uphill climb.
The snow was melting and there was lots of water in all of the streams that I saw. This little waterfall captured my attention as a bent tree gives the water a nice edge to fall over.

When I got to a farm called Setervang, the road divides and continues eastwards towards Skarnsund Bridge or heads north then west to reach another farm which I think is only used as a summer house. This road is not always suitable for driving, even in the summer as it can have quite deep ruts. It is not plowed or kept open in the winter. In the summer there is a gate to keep the sheep away from farm fields.

There was still quite a bit of snow on this back road, one that is not kept open in the winter months. However there were lots of tracks from people walking up the road. This is a popular walking area in the summer.
There were a few challenges where trees had stopped standing and were lying down for a rest. Someone had come by with a saw and made an opening for people to get through.

The main reason I had decided to come up this rather snow-covered road was to get to a viewpoint where I could see out over the fjord. There are several that can be accessed from this road, but I decided to neither go to Storlia nor Korpsåsen, both of which are lovely walks, in the summer. By the time I had gotten to this point, I did not want to go much farther across snow. I was on my own and had to be careful that I didn’t twist my ankle or otherwise injure myself. So I decided on a place that I knew about which was closer than either of those places.

I took a left turn here but I’m not going to go as far as Korpsåsen, which is 700 meters according to the signpost, but I always feel is about twice that distance.
Maybe a hundred meters from the snow-covered road, then turn left at the top of this hill.
A viewpoint with a shelter, at the edge of a cliff.
The shelter
The view, looking east towards Vangshylla and Verdal. The island of Ytterøy is also visible. This was the reason to trudge through the snow. I stopped her for a few minutes to just enjoy the sunshine and being able to see a long way. Though it doesn’t show up well in this picture, there are snow-covered mountains in the distance.

After enjoying the view, I went back to Gammelplassen, where in the summer you can park a car and headed off towards Skarnsund Bridge and home. However, there was a lot of snow on the trail, trees that had blown over, and a stream to cross before I got onto the section of the trail that was mostly free of snow.

Gammelplassen – no parking available at the moment. Come back in a month or two. But I’m not the first one to cross on foot. There were both human and animal footprints.
I’m on my way home, but first I have to get to the bridge. I’ve used about an hour so far.
Colt’s foot (in Norwegian, hestehov) is one of the first flowers to come up in the spring. The flower comes out first and then large leaves grow throughout the summer. These fellows had plenty of water and were eager to get on with their lives. They were not going to wait for the snow to disappear.
The trail continues on the other side of the stream. I followed the footprints and found a good crossing point. There was quite a bit of water in the stream, heading down to the fjord.
Here too there were all sorts of lazy trees who couldn’t stay standing. Some of the trees were more difficult to get around, over or under than others.
Finally, the trail becomes more bare than snow-covered, though the first part was quite wet.
Furufjellet (the pine mountain), the goal of the walking trip, about an hour and a half from the start of my walk, and about 50 minutes from home. As I suspected, there was little snow on this part of the hillside.
Looking up from the previous picture. There are pine trees at the top of this cliff.

I often like to look at the flowers that are growing in different places, but in the middle of April there are still very few wild flowers out. I’ll have to wait until May before more come out. At this point there are a few that have to get their blooms out before the leaves come out on the deciduous trees. Colt’s foot (hestehov in Norwegian) is usually the first one and at lower elevations there are now numerous blooms along the sides of the road. Another plant, hepatica nobilis, (blåveis in Norwegian), anemone hepatica or liverwort in English, is very characteristic for Inderøy municipality.

This picture was taken on a sunny slope facing south. Anemone hepatica likes dry and calcium-rich soil. We have this on our lot and it is quite common throughout Inderøy.
I’m back to the bridge. One kilometer across the bridge and about half a kilometer to home on the other side.

This was my first long walk of the year, using about two and a half hours, without any breaks except to take pictures. I was tired when I got home, but not as much as I had expected. Getting out into nature, away from cars and people, helps me charge up my batteries and keep me in a good frame of mind.

I am planning to do other walks and perhaps there will be blogs about them. Most of the walks that I can do easily from home I have already written about, so no promises about how often new blogs will come out. From about the middle of May, the municipality of Inderøy has a series of walks which I am hoping to participate in this year too.

Have you been out for a walk in nature recently? Is this the weekend for you to get away for an hour or two? Enjoy your walk.

February 2022 – Snow Month

February is a winter month where I live and it is expected that there will be snow on the ground all month long. Usually I also expect some sunny weather though the temperatures can be below freezing. This year, we have been getting new snow on a lot of days of February. This is the 25th of the month and so far I have been out moving snow on our driveway 13 of these days, including today. The snowfalls may not be that large each time, but they have been constant and are building up both on the lawn and along the roads.

Because of so much snow, I have not been out walking much, except to walk to a local dairy farm to pick up fresh milk in bottles. This I do once or twice a week depending on how much milk we have used. During today’s walk, I was thinking about the amount of snow that had built up during the month.

When I started my walk today, it was snowing, so some of the pictures are a bit dark. By the time I was on my home, the sun was playing peek-a-boo with the clouds and sometimes it was out and sometimes not.

We live on a side road so it is not as regularly cleared as I would have liked. However, yesterday a road scraper went by and scraped several layers of ice and snow off the road, leaving it piled up beside the road.

This road was scraped yesterday, though a little new snow came down in the night. On the left there is a guard rail hidden in the snow bank. I found the chunks of ice and snow on the right an imitation of the old-fashioned rock guards on many rural roads in Norway.
The intersection between the road to Vangshylla and Utøyvegen. The road name signs are visible but snow and ice have been piled up around them.
I also follow a farm road which has been cleared intermittently all winter. I wasn’t the first person walking up this hill today.
Temperatures have been slightly above freezing the last couple of days, so snow has been sliding off roofs. With all this snow, the children at the dairy farm have obviously been out enjoying it. This week they even have a week off school.
Walking along Utøyvegen, the guard rail is visible, though the snow is piled up to the top of it. The sun was trying to peek through the clouds.

As I was walking, I was thinking about the deer that live in our neighborhood. We have one deer who comes by at least once a day to eat the sunflower seed hulls lying on the ground under the bird feeder. I have also seen a group of three deer which I presume is a mother with two offspring from last year. The deer have long skinny legs so they do cross the fields of relatively deep snow.

Deer tracks in the snow. The deer cross the road in the same places all the time, winter and summer. It is just easier to see where in the winter.
Deer tracks in the snow along the road.
More deer tracks on the other side of the road.

I was walking home by now and thinking about the deer. The snow is getting quite deep for them and many of the tracks that I saw in the snow had been partly filled in by the new snow during the night. But suddenly, I saw our regular one.

The deer was on the road and she seemed to have caught either sight of me moving, or heard some sort of sound. I stopped walking to see what she would do. She seemed to have come from the left. She looked at me for a minute and then decided to dash off, into the field on the left.
The deer was running, sort of, but the deep snow did not make it easy nor quick. I let her get away before going farther down the road.

It was good to get out and get some fresh air as well as some fresh milk. But I still had an hour’s work to do my share of cleaning snow off the driveway. Have a good day!

February Walk – Ice

As the walks that I take at this time of year tend to follow the same few trails or roads, I look for different themes for taking my pictures as I walk. Today I noticed ice in different types of locations.

January 2022 was the month of storms in Norway, though we didn’t feel all of them where we live. The Norwegian Meteorological Institute summed up the month of January with very high levels of bad weather warnings (see the article in Norwegian here), about twice as many as a year ago. There was a storm somewhere in Norway on 26 of the 31 days in January, with 82 yellow warnings, 12 orange warnings (more serious) and 2 red, extreme warnings. Why were there so many storms in January in Norway? There was a high pressure area sitting over Great Britain, so they got the sunshine. The storms coming in off the Atlantic Ocean went around Great Britain and came to Norway.

I usually think of January as the month that it warms up a bit and the snow disappears. This year we got that, but we also got several storms that brought more snow, or heavy rain. The last week of January saw more snow. February tends to be, in my opinion, more stable weather, meaning that there are fewer storms and more sunnier weather, though it can be quite cold and very often a lot of ice.

Today the temperature was about +2 degrees Celsius and no wind when I was out walking. The sun shone intermittently, but the day felt bright. But the last few days has given us changeable weather, sometimes snow, sometimes rain, but always the temperature has been about zero degrees, so that the rain does not get rid of much of the snow. That means that we have had perfect conditions for creating ice, especially where one drives or where one walks.

Running water creates ice and this stream was no exception. This is the same stream that a few weeks ago was causing flooding on the field at the top. The stream is fed under the cultivated field through a large pipe. Here the stream tumbles down a ravine, causing ice to form along its path.
In the woods, running water can also cause icicles to form. Here was a long series of icicles.
As I got closer to the icicles, I noticed the rock formations as well. Here there were several layers of rock, with large spaces between them. Above there are farm fields. Some of the water seems to be flowing in the stream I had found a week ago, but most of the water just seemed to drip over the edge of the rocks. Note that there is a lot of moss on the rocks indicating that these rocks are wet all year long.
The sun came out as I was writing my name in the tour book at the lean-to. I checked the map on my telephone and it told me that I was about 80 meters above sea level. I make sure I don’t go near the edge at this time of the year. I do not want to slide down a cliff face.
A week ago, I had seen a large tree stump at the water’s edge at the beach. Was it still there, I wondered? So I walked down to the beach and sure enough, it was stranded near the high water level on the beach. Today the tide was much lower. We can have up to four meters difference between high tide and low tide.
Back to ice and the conditions of the roads. This is a private gravel road that leads to five homes and many cabins. Icy! I was glad that I was wearing cleats under my shoes. I was also very careful where I walked. At the lowest point of this section of road, the stream goes under the road through a large pipe.
Even the municipal road that leads to the quay at Vangshylla was very, very icy, though a bit of sand had been put down to allow cars better traction on the ice. Walking along the edge of the road, it was very icy. I was glad to be walking uphill, not downhill.
As I walked up the road, I again saw icicles forming where water drains off the cliff and freezes as it falls.
The yellow fence at the top of the cliff shows our property. Here, too, ice forms as water is draining away and then freezing.

As it was several days since I had been out for a walk, I dawdled a bit, watching where I was walking and was out for about an hour and a half. It was good to get fresh air and let my eyes focus on things far away, and not just look at a computer screen or my knitting.

I hope you too have had a good walk this weekend.